So here we have President Obama back in the Oval Office for another four years. A resounding victory in both the Electoral College and the popular vote. One of only four Presidents in the last century to have received 50% or more of the popular vote twice. We are now being told that all of those confident predictions of "Romney momentum" and a Romney win coming from the GOP and its echo chambers on the Fox"News"Channel and right-wing talk radio were nothing more than self-delusional distortions of the facts (that the New York Times' Nate Silver had right, right there for everyone to see).
My own prediction of a Romney win (1) was
based not on the polls, which I don't trust too much anyway, but on the
assumption that the Rove cheat-the-vote machine was fully geared up and ready
to go. I thought that combined with the massive GOP voter-suppression efforts,
especially in Ohio and Florida, that machine would swing the election to Romney
regardless of what the honest vote total would be. Then, having seen the now-famous
Rove-Fox"News"Channel contretemps live,
I speculated that the former had simply failed (2). A consideration of all the
GOP-and-relatives' hand-wringing and "where-do-we-go-from-here" that is now
going will be the subject of my next column. But in this space we shall briefly
consider the choices facing President Obama as he heads into his second term.
I have never considered the President to
be any kind of a left-winger. Back in December 2007 I said (3): "As they
have done in the past, the center-right Democratic Leadership Council is this
time around running what in Standard-Breed (trotters and pacers) horse racing
terminology is known as an 'entry.' One owner enters two horses and bettors can
bet on the two together for one ticket." The "entry" was of course Obama and
Hillary Clinton. (The DLC no longer formally exists. But its Republican-lite,
or what used to be called "liberal Republican," policies do and they are held
by a number of still-powerful Democrats. There are contemporary observers who consider
Pres. Obama to actually have that sort of politics [4].) I considered the issue
of Obama's attachment to the DLC and DLC policies again in 2009 (5), and once
again following the elections of 2010 (6). In that column I had cited a leading
DLC-er on the results of the 2010 Congressional elections:
"On the day after the 2010 national
elections, Evan
Bayh, retiring Senator from Indiana, laid out very clearly the current
political and policy program of the dominant power in the Democratic Party, the
Democratic Leadership Council (7) . The reasons for the Democratic losses around the country,
so Bayh told us (paraphrasing in quotes), were that Obama was "too far left,'
that he should have "pushed jobs,' not pushed health care reform so hard, and
should have taken it easier on Wall Street and the banks. "Cut taxes, attack
the budget, grab the center' was the central headline in the piece. Obama has
to "move to the center,' needs to "reach across the aisle,' and "must learn to
work with GOP in order to get things done.' "
OK, now here we have had Sen. Mitch
McConnell announce in December 2010, just after the deathless prose above of
ex-Sen. Bayh had appeared, that his number one objective in the Congress was to
enable the defeat of President Obama in 2012. We have had McConnell and
Boehner/Cantor push that strategy to the limit, not only on legislation but on
appointment confirmations and any other obstructive tactic they could undertake.
On bank regulation they were so aggressive on the possible nomination of
Elizabeth Warren to be the first head of the new Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau which she had virtually invented, that Obama didn't even bother trying
to put her name up. (Think that the GOP might be regretting that one, eh Scott
Brown? Duh!) Nevertheless, contrary to the advice ex-Sen. Bayh was rendering,
Pres. Obama, still no radical he, had made it clear that were he to be
re-elected any "budget deal" would have to include a tax increase for the
wealthy. He also pushed hard on the so-called "women's issues" that the DLC-ers
always want to put on the back-burner. And he took what can be described in
current US politics as a "left" position on the immigration question. And guess
what? He won!
Funnily enough, I happened to hear
ex-Senator Bayh as the token Democrat (sic) on a Fox"News"Channel post-2012
election wrap-up. And guess what? Despite the clear illustration of the GOP
tactics and strategy, really for the whole of the Obama Presidency, and despite
the early indications that they ain't budging much on the "fiscal cliff"
(really slope), at least for now, there's ex-Sen. Bayh, on the telly, virtually
quoting himself from The New York Times in 2010. It happens that Sen.
Bayh still represents a powerful wing of the Democratic Party. There's ex-Sen.
David Boren (also an influential DLC-er) saying exactly the same thing. There
are still right-wing "Blue Dog" Democrats in the Congress, Sen.-elect Joe
Donnelly of Indiana being one of the new ones, and Heath Shuler (he should have stayed in football) apparently thinking about challenging for Minority Leader should Nancy Pelosi have stepped down.
At the same time, the liberal/progressive
wing of the Congressional Democratic Party is getting stronger too. First,
Harry Reid, with his majority enlarged (when the prediction had been that it
would shrink or even disappear), is starting to make some aggressively true
Democratic noises. Then we have newly-elected progressive Democratic Senators
like Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Baldwin and the re-elected Sherrod Brown. The
best left-Democrat of them all, Alan Grayson, has been elected to the House
once again. And of course there is still the 75-member strong House Progressive
Caucus, led by Keith Ellison and Raul Grijalva. In the last Congress they
proposed the only responsible, progressive deficit-cutting budget out there (8,
9). It received no attention in the mainstream media or from the Obama White
House, but this time around, with a reduced GOP majority on the House, and
Obama not facing re-election, hey, you never know.
So here we have the Presidential decision
to make. It's not about a legislative agenda first, a laundry list of nice
programs that left-Democrats have always run with in the past, and still do,
actually. It's not even about which budget deal he is ready to cut. It's about first and foremost which domestic
political direction is he going to go in, which political philosophy is he
going to hew to: DLC or Democratic Progressive Caucus, Clintonian
"triangulation" to fend off the liberal wing of his party, or moving forward to
re-establish the true Democratic brand, domestically. The President is not
going to change US foreign policy, which first and foremost focuses on the
onward march of American imperialism (10). But on the domestic side there is a
major decision to be made by him. We will know which choice he has made when we
see his bottom line on the upcoming fiscal slope. We will know which choice he
has made when we see what his new cabinet appointments are. For us political
junkies for progressive democracy - it's going to be a very interesting couple
of months.
References :
1. Jonas,
S., " The Core Values of
a President Romney," BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT: Thursday, 01 November 2012, URL: http://truth-out.org/buzzflash/commentary/item/17615-the-core-values-of-a-president-romney?tmpl=component&print=1
2. Jonas, S., " Ohio and an Attempt
to Cheat the Vote?" Nov.
7, 2012, published on: The Planetary Movement: http://www.planetarymovement.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=737&Itemid=58 , OpEdNews: http://www.opednews.com/articles/I-Was-Wrong-About-the-Elec-by-Steven-Jonas-121107-91.html , The Greanville Post: http://www.greanvillepost.com/2012/11/08/postmortems-ohio-and-an-attempt-to-cheat-the-vote/
3. Jonas, S., "THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, 2008:
DEMOCRATIC CONSIDERATIONS" (The Political Junkies 172), http ://tpjmagazine.us/jonas172.
6. Jonas, S., "Obama and the DLC: Post-Election, 2010," BuzzFlash/Truthout on Wed, 12/01/2010, http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12012
7. Bayh, E., "Where do the Democrats Go Next?"
The New York Times, Nov. 3, 2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/03/opinion/03bayh.html?ref=politics
8. Dickinson, T., "Progressive Caucus
Budget: The Only Honest Plan on the Table," Rolling Stone, April 28,
2011, http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/blogs/national-affairs/americas-only-honest-budget-proposal-20110428#ixzz2C2MQjLHz
9. Jonas, S., " Grover Norquist's Wet Dream,"
BuzzFlash@Truthout, April 15, 2011, http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12601
10. vander
Pluym, I., " Mystery Series Part 6: Revealed," Perry Street Palace,
Nov. 5, 2012, click here